Counter-Strike 2

MLG has announced that its first Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament will take place at X Games Aspen, which will also mark the first appearance of videogames at the event. The top eight CS:GO teams from North America and Europe, determined through online qualifiers, will compete in the tournament, which will be broadcast online on MLG.tv, with highlights aired during X Games television broadcasts on ESPN and ABC.

"2014 was a breakout year for eSports with the first ever MLG tournament at X Games Austin, millions watching competition on MLG.tv, and more than 71 million people competing in or watching eSports events around the globe," MLG co-founder and CEO Sundance DiGiovanni said in a statement. "Our X Games debut was such a success we knew we had to continue the tradition. The MLG X Games Aspen Invitational will further elevate eSports placing our top competitors amongst the best winter athletes in the world."

MLG's X Games Aspen Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Invitational will begin on January 23 and run through to its gold medal finale on January 25. X Games attendees who want to watch the action live will require a "premium pass," purchasable from the MLG Store for $100, which includes reserved seating, a behind-the-scenes tour, a gift bag of MLG merchandise, and more.

Preceding MLG's event is the Dreamhack Winter 2014 event, which kicks off on November 27.

Red Faction Guerrilla Steam Edition

[Update: Nordic has clarified that it's actually going to update Red Faction: Guerrilla to DirectX 11. "Instead of just abandoning DX10 we decided to bring it over to DX11," Nordic's Reinhard Pollice said. "With this implementation which will soon be available as beta via Steam we hope to deliver a great Red Faction Guerrilla experience for PC gamers especially on Windows 7 and Windows 8." The DX11 update went into beta yesterday and is expected to be ready for full release within a couple of weeks.]

Original story:

Nordic Games said at the beginning of this year that it would strip the Games for Windows Live requirement from Red Faction: Guerrilla, which it picked up, along with the Red Faction franchise as a whole, following the collapse of original owner THQ. And now it's finally gotten around to doing it.

Executive Producer Reinhard Pollice made the announcement on Steam, where he revealed that a Games for Windows Live sign-in is no longer required to play the game. Matchmaking and multiplayer, along with leaderboards, voice chat, and achievements, are now handled entirely through Steam. The game also now uses the DirectX9 renderer by default, because "DX10 created a lot of problems and resulted in performance issues," and it will attempt to migrate saves from Games for Windows Live to the new system the first time it launches.

In a follow-up post, Pollice explained that while some fans might be disappointed by the decision to default to DX9 instead of making DX10 work properly, it's not actually going to make a noticeable difference. "The whole DX10 support from MS side is not good that's why we believed it's the safest to go for DX9 mode. This will run perfectly on any DX10 system as well," he wrote. "Seriously DX10 in Red Faction Guerrilla was just a marketing gag as there was no real advantage."

To ensure that all is working as it should, Nordic is running a beta version of the overhauled game, open to anyone who wishes to take part. Instructions for doing so are here, but you'll also need a couple of passwords, which can be found in Pollice's forum post.

PC Gamer
Show us your rig

Each week on Show Us Your Rig, we feature the PC game industry's best and brightest as they show us the systems they use to work and play.

Ben Knapp, Senior Character artist on Smite over at Hi-Rez Studios, continues a trend we've been seeing with character artists featured on Show Us Your Rig. Specifically, they have an excellent reason to cover their desks in toys. Ben has figures ranging from X-Men to Assassin's Creed to Dragon Ball Z and beyond all around his desk, and a massive Cintiq touch screen in the center. He was kind enough to take some time and tell us about his PC and more.

What's in your PC?

Dell Precision T3600 Workstation

  • CPU - Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-1650 @ 3.2GHz
  • Motherboard - DELL Precision t3600 Motherboard with Intel Chipset
  • Memory - 16GB DDR3
  • Drives - 2TB HDD in a Raid 1 configuration
  • Video - NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550 Ti
  • Power Supply - DELL 635W
  • Case - DELL Midtower
  • Display - WACOM Cintiq 21UX, DELL 2208WFP
  • Mouse - DELL USB Optical Mouse
  • Keyboard - DELL Entry keyboard

What's the most interesting/unique part of your setup?

Simply put, the Decor. I have a pretty cool selection statues, figures, and reference materials I have collected over the years. These resources prove to be invaluable when creating character art, giving me inspiration and reference. I spend most of my time at this desk Monday-Friday so I feel it has to be entertaining to me as well.

The figures on my desk started out from just having some select action figures I grew up with. I started with some classic 80s figures and then started to branch out into different comic book figures and video game ones soon after. Eventually it has grown into what you see here. My favorite is a custom Skeletor action figure I found online; never before that had I seen a figure that actually made Skeletor into a thin mage opposed to a body builder with a skull head.

What's always within arm's reach on your desk?

You will always find a Wacom pen and a protein bar within arms reach. Also given the type of character I am working on, I might grab some additional reference materials and sprinkle them around my desk.

What are you playing right now?

Right now I am playing only a few games. My go to game is Marvel Heroes, if you look at my desk you can see why. Outside of that I am a huge fan of survival horror type games and I am really enjoying Alien Isolation and the Evil Within.

What's your favorite game and why?

My favorite game is Resident Evil 1, closely followed by Resident Evil 2. I know a lot of people hate the controls and cheesy acting, but I never had a problem with that. I had not played any other survival horror game before this and it made a huge impact on me. I never had experienced a mood and atmosphere like that prior to playing RE and it showed me there is more to games than just run & gun and platforming. 

Far Cry® 4

The new Far Cry 4 story trailer is long, stylish, and wrapped in a dreamy, very James-Bond-theme-song-style take on a classic rock track. It's also got a guy getting launched from the top of a tower by way of a double-barrelled shotgun blast to the back and a dangerously addled Hurk jumping a quad off the side of a cliff, thereby maintaining the magnificent dichotomy we know and love as Far Cry.

I don't think there's a whole lot in the way of big revelations to be found in this new video. You are Ajay Ghale, you travel to Kyrat to fulfil your mother's last wish, Pagan Min picks you up at the airport, and then everything goes a little sideways. It looks to me to be pretty much the same as the past couple of Far Cry games, albeit much prettier, but I do dig the game-to-game evolution and refinement of the franchise's central villains. They're not necessarily the kind of guys I'd want to go out drinking with, but they sure are interesting.

Far Cry 4 comes out on November 18.

PC Gamer

The PC iteration will be the most visually impressive version of GTA 5, according to CVG's latest hands-on account. GTA 5 will run at 4K resolution on PC, and all 'next gen' versions of the game will include a fully-supported first person mode, complete with modeled car interiors and proper first-person shooting.

As Dan mentions in his preview, "It's not just a case of plonking a new camera within a character's head, just because they could, but an extensive rework of the game's movement, driving and targeting engines. There are thousands of new animations for gun reloading alone, no to mention the first-person views of parachuting, carjacking etc."

First-person extends to GTA's sandbox online mode, which creates space for proper FPS modes within GTA. Multiplayer heists—a long awaited feature for console players—are also nearing completion.

There are also 20 new forms of wildlife, including cats, which CVG confirm can be killed (the MONSTERS). The soundtrack includes 100 extra tracks including something from The Backstreet Boys. There's a luscious new lighting engine and extra detail everywhere, as you'd expect from a version of the game unshackled by Xbox 360 and PS3 hardware. Also, you can one-shot trucks with the new rail gun.

GTA V o'clock called the first-person mode a few weeks back, and you'll find more speculation and analysis about the upgraded 'next gen' version in the latest episode. Once you're done there, you might also want to check out Andy's slightly more sedate guide to playing GTA V without breaking any laws.

Here are a few new shots of the first-person mode. You'll find more over on CVG.

PC Gamer

Blizzcon is happening this weekend, so we'll get to see what Blizzard's plans are for the coming year or two—don't worry, we'll be there in force to report live from the scene. Meanwhile, PCGamesN note that Blizz have been teasing some mysterious noises ahead of the event. Take your best guess.

CLIP ONE

Our guess: an alarming act of flatulence propels a Zerg Hydralisk several miles through the air, whereupon it collides fatally with the flank of a surprised Siege Tank.

CLIP TWO

Our guess: A Terran marine bends attempting to tie his shoelaces instead shoots himself in the foot and promptly falls over. Not heard: Jim Raynor fullscreening the inevitable YouTube video on fullscreen on his massive battlecruiser to the amusement of Terran top brass.

Whatever's happening in these, it's interesting that they don't sound like Protoss. The third expansion: Legacy of the Void, is set to focus on these mysterious space warriors. Is that what Blizzard will reveal this weekend?

Keep an eye on the Soundcloud page for more, and post your best guesses about the noises in the comments.

Nov 4, 2014
PC Gamer
REINSTALL

Reinstall invites you to join us in revisiting PC gaming days gone by. Today, Ben takes on the kings and castles of Silver.

Ah, Infogrames. The name that makes your brain go Infogrames? What the hell is a grame? The logo that looks like diced potatoes. Through the late 90s I came to associate the name not with carbs but quality. Outcast, Worms: Armageddon, V-Rally, Mission: Impossible. The best, for me, was Silver.

A fantasy action-RPG, Silver was given away with PCs manufactured by Tiny as part of a promotion, which is like pouring yourself a bowl of Coco Pops and having a disc tumble out. It deserved better.

Given the heady excitement of becoming the new owner of an HP Pavilion 4450, an 8MB rig boasting 4GB of storage along with free copies of Encarta 98 and Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego?, why do I remember Silver? Easy: the gesture-based controls.

Clicking and holding the mouse button then moving it vertically causes David, the blonde suit of armour from the box cover, to perform an uppercut. Thrusting it downwards makes him turn quickly to attack enemies at the rear. Holding the mouse button then moving your hand horizontally performs a side slash.

It s glorious. I had never interacted with an RPG like that before, and I haven t since. David s sword is an extension of my arm, and although it feels a bit binary today like rudimentary motion control it remains an intuitive method of replicating swordplay. Enemy positions matter. If you re surrounded, use sideswipes. If they re jumping at your from behind, meet them with a turnaround slash. Are they cowering with shields? Lunge.

It s glorious. I had never interacted with an RPG like that before, and I haven t since.

No sooner is the tutorial over than Fuge, son of the evil emperor Silver, abducts your wife, Jennifer. Silver is ordering all women of childbearing age to his castle so he can choose a bride. Hey guy, ever heard of speed dating? Your quest involves joining the rebels, forming a team, and rescuing the female population. The story is less special than its controls, noteworthy only for the unironically clich d way it latches onto every fantasy trope imaginable. There s a young man seeking vengeance against a shadowy force, eight elemental orbs to collect as you romp through medieval hamlets and icy fortresses, and the emotional deaths of loved ones. Numbers rise out of damaged enemies, and those you kill drop health-replenishing turkey legs. With Final Fantasy VIII, Suikoden II, Baldur s Gate II and Diablo II as contemporaries, Silver was somewhat lost in the shuffle.

In my opinion, it was better than all of them. Take your companions: there s Chiaro, a wizard apprentice who joins the rebels after learning his master was killed by Silver, and the unarmed Cagen, a martial arts monk who survived the madness that spread through his monastery by not drinking the poisoned water. The once proud warrior Jug is looking to redeem himself after languishing too long in seedy pubs. All of them have their own motivation for fighting.

Although you can t control your companions directly, choosing the right one is the key to battle. For instance, if you want to hang back and cast ice magic, pick Jug, who fights up close. Not that this works all the time, however. In one instance a wintry dragon boss turns your friends to ice and forces you to fight alone. Companions add an extra wrinkle to already engaging combat, another variable to shape your approach to the enemy encounters

Silver s portrayal of female characters was at least reasonably credible for the late 90s. Sekune, an archer you meet in the rebel camp, can certainly handle herself. If you talk to her while she s practising and question how good she is at hitting moving targets, she responds by bullseyeing a bird out of the sky. Vivienne escaped Silver s women-herding thanks to her combat skills. One of the most powerful characters in the game is Silver s sorcerer daughter, Glass. Though the game opens with the mother of all misogynistic acts, Silver s female characters have the capacity to be as nuanced as the male characters, which is a surprise given the context of the story.

The strong writing endures. One scenario is set at the magical gates of Haven, which permit only the virtuous to enter. What if my hatred for Silver betrays me? questions David. He s stolen your wife, replies grandad. Your hatred is justified. These touches are things I ve only recently appreciated.

My abiding memory of Silver, however, is the controls. Over the course of this 15-hour RPG you battle werewolves, dragons, imps and summoners, but the scheme particularly excels during swordon- sword encounters. Particularly memorable is the boss battle with the dual-wielding Fuge, requiring you to master on-the-fly duking and moving in energetic bouts.

Admittedly, the magic has slightly dimmed in the light of today s controls. The lack of lock-on makes targeting more difficult than it should be, and special moves you can learn from weapon trainers, like a figure of eight slash, miss a trick by not making you perform that motion on your mouse. Still, in my mind, Silver s fast death dances are comparable to circle-strafing in Unreal or Quake, and why it never caught on in later action- RPGs is anyone s guess.

So, will we ever see a sequel? Possibly. Last year Nordic Games snapped up the rights to the dormant Atari franchise. Then again, whether they ll just create a new franchise rather than roll with a name that s unGoogleable remains to be seen. But for those who do remember it—its great characters and innovative controls—Silver shines bright.

PC Gamer

Elite: Dangerous player Titus Balls has put together a video showing off the some of the game's stunning cosmic scenery, which also takes advantage of YouTube's new 60fps option. You'll need to watch the video in Chrome to see the faster frame rate, but it still looks great even at 30fps.

The newly-released Dangerous beta, known as Beta 3, offers a staggering 2,500 star systems to explore. But that's only a fraction of the final game, which will have something like 300 billion—as many as there are in our actual galaxy. It'll take you a while to see them all, but there'll be no shortage of incredible stuff to stare slack-jawed at, some of which you can see below in Balls' amazing video.

PC Gamer
PC Gamer

Imagine gaming on a crystal clear display that curves around your field of vision. The LG 34UC97 does just that, delivering crisp gaming performance in vivid colours across an expansive 21:9 curved surface area. See the world race by in your peripheral vision in F1 2015, and catch flanking foes in Counter-Strike on LG's state-of-the-art super widescreen panel.

The 34UC97 IPS display delivers top-class colour consistency at excellent viewing angles, so you can be sure that games look exactly as their creators intended. The screen gives you more space than two standard 16:9 monitors combined, but without a bezel interrupting the image. The flicker free display also reduces eyestrain, and the monitor includes a reader mode that provides an easy working environment between gaming sessions.

Whether you're gaming on PC or console, the LG 34UC97's multiport ensures maximum compatibility, furnished with two HDMI ports, two USB 3.0 ports and a Displayport. It's deluxe champagne gold back cover will make your gaming setup look great too, and the gentle curve will let you enjoy your games with maximum visual comfort.

Beyond gaming, the LG 34UC97 provides a productive environment for graphic designers and photographers that demand the highest visual quality from their displays. The stunning colour expression extends to the very edges of the screen, and the generous screen real estate delivered by this 34-inch panel is perfect for multitasking across multiple applications. When you want to kick back and enjoy a movie, you can enjoy spectacular HD performance in super wide 21:9.

In short, why have two standard displays when you can have one? A single screen means fewer distractions, and the wraparound display means greater immersion, especially when you're camping in the bushes in Arma 3. or mustering your troops in Total War. If you're feeling brave, and fancy some 360 degree entertainment, you can always buy twenty screens and replicate the setup featured in this video.

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